With These Hands

The photo is by Frank Franklin II of the AP, found on Twitter via Chris Heller this morning. It shows Breezy Point in the Rockaways section of Queens, ravaged by a fire last night that reportedly destroyed as many as 80 homes. Devastating. (Colorado sympathizes.) Mayor Bloomberg says there were 23 blazes across New York City, as Sandy’s aftermath made fires difficult to reach and difficult to fight. We often forget that it’s the second-order effects of these disasters that can sometimes be the worst parts — like in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, when fires did far more damage than the quake itself. Thankfully, it appears no one was hurt in the devastating Breezy Point blaze.

10 people are already reported dead in New York, though, and Mayor Bloomberg says, Tragically we expect that number to go up.” As I said last night, I have no sense for how high it’s likely to go. We can only hope and pray it remains relatively low. There were also, if I have this right, at least 5 deaths elsewhere in New York state, 3 in New Jersey, 2 each in Maryland, Connecticut and Pennsylvania, 1 in West Virginia, and 1 on the HMS Bounty, for a total of 26 U.S. deaths so far. Along with the 67 deaths in the Caribbean and 1 in Canada, that’s 94 deaths total — and counting, I’m afraid.

Meanwhile, here’s another remarkable photo, which I didn’t publish last night because I was concerned it might be fake, but now The Atlantic appears to have confirmed it. It’s a shot of flooding last night in Manhattan’s East Village, apparently taken by jesseandgreg on Instagram (or posted on them, anyway):

Sorry guys, but we KEEP James the greater. . . I have used the term “kids teaching kids” multiple times, we can’t go back to that. He is the leader of the pitching staff, (and probably a major voice in the overall clubhouse) the flag bearer of the “rays way”. He stays, in fact find a way to keep him here 5-7 more years. . .

Brehm and his colleagues train hard and perform extraordinary, dangerous rescues. They should be commended for their selfless work and are obviously heroes. That Others May Live is an account of Brehm’s life during a few notable rescues. The chapter on the Mount McKinley adventure is well written and exciting. There are plenty of insights into Brehm’s inner thoughts and emotions as a rescuer, as a husband and as a family man.